Waveform inversion using a logarithmic wavefield SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 175 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 294 time in Scopus
Title
Waveform inversion using a logarithmic wavefield
Author(s)
Shin, Changsoo; Min, Dong-Joo
Alternative Author(s)
민동주
Publication Year
2006-05
Abstract
Although waveform, inversion has been studied extensively since its be.-inning 20 years ago, applications to seismic field data have been limited, and most of those applications have been for global-seismology- or engineering-seismology-scale problems. not for exploration-scale data. As an alternative to classical waveform inversion, we propose the use of a new, objective function constructed by taking the logarithm of wave-fields. allowing consideration of three types of objective function, namely, amplitude only, phase only, or both. In our waveform inversion. we estimate the source signature as well as the velocity structure by including functions of amplitudes and phases of the source signature in the objective function. We compute the steepest-descent directions by using a matrix formalism derived from a frequency-domain, finite-element/finite-difference modeling technique. Our numerical algorithms are similar to those of reverse-time migration and waveform inversion based on the adjoint state of the wave equation. In order to demonstrate the practical applicability of our algorithm, we use a synthetic data set from the Marmousi model and seismic data collected from the Korean continental shelf. For noise-free synthetic data, the velocity structure produced by our inversion algorithm is closer to the true velocity structure than that obtained with conventional waveform inversion. When random noise is added, the inverted velocity model is also close to the true Marmousi model, but when frequencies below 5 Hz are removed from the data, the velocity structure is not as good as those for the noise-free and noisy data. For field data, we compare the time-domain synthetic seismograms generated for the velocity model inverted by our algorithm with real seismograms and find that the results show that our inversion algorithm reveals short-period features of the subsurface. Although we use wrapped phases in our examples, we still obtain reasonable results. We expect that if we were to use correctly unwrapped phases in the inversion algorithm, we would obtain better results.
ISSN
0016-8033
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/4888
DOI
10.1190/1.2194523
Bibliographic Citation
GEOPHYSICS, v.71, no.3, pp.R31 - R42, 2006
Publisher
SOC EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICISTS
Subject
SEISMIC-REFLECTION DATA; PRESTACK DEPTH-MIGRATION; FINITE-DIFFERENCE; FREQUENCY-DOMAIN; NONLINEAR INVERSION; ELASTIC INVERSION; CROSSHOLE DATA; ACCURACY; EQUATION; VELOCITY
Keywords
Finite difference methods; Finite element analysis; Geophysical techniques; Seafloor phenomena; Seismic waves; Seismology
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.

qrcode

Items in ScienceWatch@KIOST are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse